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HIV Prevention With Latinos
Theory, Research, and Practice
Edited by Kurt C. Organista
484 pages
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17 line-cuts and 4 half-tones
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235x156mm
978-0-19-976430-3
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Paperback
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28 June 2012
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- First ever compilation on the topic of HIV prevention with U.S. Latinos
- 19 chapters provide unprecedented breadth and depth on subgroups and situations unique to the Latino experience
- Presents a structural-environmental model of HIV risk and prevention
According to the 2010 U.S. Census, Latinos now comprise 16% of the general population as they continue to be one of the fastest-growing populations in the United States. However, according to recent CDC data, Latinos also account for a disproportionately high number of total new AIDS cases. Rates of AIDS among U.S. Latinos are second only to African Americans, and about 3.5-times higher than for non-Hispanic Whites. Vulnerability to HIV/AIDS increases with ethnic and racial minority status that is so often conflated with socioeconomic status. Additional factors, such as gender, sexual orientation, and stigma, also increase vulnerability to HIV/AIDS
and require us to think comprehensively about the unique structural-environmental, social and cultural factors that frame risk for HIV for U.S. Latinos.
This book, written by leading authorities on theory, research, and practice in preventing HIV with diverse Latino populations and communities, responds to the diminishing returns of the behavioral model of HIV risk by deconstructing the many social ecological contexts of risk within the Latino experience. Each of the chapters explores the most innovative thinking and original research on the prevention of HIV for a comprehensive span of subgroups and situations, including: preventing HIV in LGBT Latinos through community involvement and AIDS activism; in migrant laborers by scaling up community and cultural
resources; in adolescent Latinas by facilitating communication with their mothers about sex; by decreasing the racism, homophobia, and poverty often experienced by Latino men who have sex with men; in transgender Latinas by decreasing familial, peer, and social rejection, and by providing structures of care at local, state, and national levels; and in Latinas by improving their economic autonomy as well as improving gender-equity ideologies among men.
This is a timely and urgently needed effort by the best researchers and interventionists in the field today. Latino-serving agencies and professionals, as well as the growing number of Latino-focused HIV prevention researchers, graduate students, and faculty, will find this an invaluable resource, reference, and
guide.Readership: Professional reference book for researchers conducting HIV prevention research, as well as graduate students in the helping professions.
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Edited by Kurt C. Organista, Professor, School of Social Welfare, University of California at Berkeley Kurt C. Organista, PhD, is Professor at the School of Social Welfare, University of California, Berkeley. Contributors: Carmen Albizu-Garcia Department of Health Services Administration University of Puerto Rico San Juan, Puerto Rico
Hortensia Amaro Bouvé College of Health Sciences and Institute on Urban Health Research Northeastern University Boston, Massachusetts
Sonya G. Arreola Urban Health Program Research Triangle Institute, International San Francisco, California
George Ayala Global Forum on MSM &HIV (MSMGF) Oakland, California
Jose A. Bauermeister Health Behavior & Health Education University of Michigan Ann Arbor, Michigan
Fernanda T. Bianchi Department of Psychology George Washington University Washington, District of Columbia
Héctor Carrillo Department of Sociology Northwestern University Evanston, Illinois
Lina Cherfas Latino Commission on AIDS New York, New York
Megan Comfort Urban Health Program RTI International San Francisco, California
Lisa de Saxe Zerden School of Social Work University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Rafael M. Díaz Cesar E. Chávez Institute San Francisco State University San Francisco, California
Frank Galvan Bienestar Human Services, Inc. Los Angeles, California
Vincent Guilamo-Ramos Silver School of Social Work New York University New York, New York
Diane Hernandez Department of
Sociomedical Sciences Columbia University New York, New York
Jennifer S. Hirsch Department of Sociomedical Sciences Columbia University New York, New York
JoAnne Keatley Center of Excellence for Transgender Health University of California, San Francisco San Francisco, California
Patricia Kissinger Department of Epidemiology Tulane University New Orleans, Louisiana
Alex H. Kral Research Triangle Institute, International San Francisco, California
Lisa M. Kuhns Chidlren's Memorial Hospital Chicago, Illinois
Haiyan Li Chidlren's Memorial Hospital Chicago, Illinois
Lena Lundgren Center for Addictions Research and Services Boston, Massachusetts
Luz Marillis Lopez School of Social Work Boston University Boston, Massachusetts
Carlos Molina III Political Science and Legal Studies University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California
Miguel Muñoz-Laboy Department of Sociomedical Sciences Columbia University New York, New York
Torsten B. Neilands Department of Medicine University of California, San
Francisco San Francisco, California
Kurt C. Organista School of Social Welfare University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California
Thomas M. Painter National Center for HIV/AIDS Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Atlanta, Georgia
Paul J. Poppen Department of Psychology George Washington University Washington, District of Columbia
James Quesada Department of Anthropology California State University San Francisco San Francisco, California
Anita Raj Department of
Medicine University of California, San Diego San Diego, California
Jesus Ramirez-Valles UIC School of Public Health University of Illinois-Chicago Chicago, Illinois
Carol A. Reisen Department of Psychology George Washington University Washington, District of Columbia
Scott D. Rhodes Department of Social Sciences and Health Policy Wake Forest University Winston-Salem, North Carolina
Britt Rios-Ellis National Council of La Raza/California State University Long Beach, Center for Latino Community Health Long Beach, California
Edgar Rivera-Colon Department of Sociomedical Sciences Mailman School of Public Health Columbia University New York, New York
Timoteo Rodriguez Department of Anthropology University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California
Sheilla Rodríguez-Madera Criminal Justice Department University of Puerto Rico at Carolina Carolina, Puerto Rico
Jorge Sánchez Cesar E. Chávez Institute San Francisco State University San Francisco, California
Fernando M. Sañudo Health Promotion Center Vista Community Clinic Vista, California
Kurt Schroeder. Cesar E. Chávez Institute San Francisco State University San Francisco, California
Michele G. Shedlin College of Nursing New York University New York, New York
Monica D. Ulibarri Department of Psychiatry University of California, San Diego San Diego, California
Nelson Varas-Díaz Center for the Study of Social Differences and Health Graduate School of Social Work University of Puerto Rico San Juan, Puerto Rico
Emily E. Vasquez Sociomedical Sciences Mailman School of Public Health Columbia
University New York, New York
Miriam Y. Vega Latino Commission on AIDS New York, New York
Antonia M. Villarruel School of Nursing University of Michigan Ann Arbor, Michigan
Paula Worby Multicultural Institute Berkeley, California
Maria Cecilia Zea Department of Psychology George Washington University Washington, District of Columbia
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Foreword
Sandra R. Hernandez
Introduction
Kurt C. Organista
1. The Urgent Need for Structural Environmental Models of HIV Risk and Prevention in US Latino Populations: The Case of Migrant Day Laborers
Kurt C. Organista, Paula Worby, Jim Quesada, Alex Kral, Rafael Diaz, Torsten Neilands, and Sonya Arreola
2. Enhancing Peer Norms, Self-Efficacy, Self Esteem, and Social Support for Safe Sex in Naturalistic Environments: The Role of Community Involvement in Latino Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Communities
Jesus Ramirez-Valles, Lisa M. Kuhns, and Haiyan Li
3. Sexual Culture, Structure, and Change: A Transnational Framework for Studies of Latino Migration and HIV
Héctor Carrillo
4. Love, Sex and Power Revisited: The Integration of a Gendered Context in HIV Prevention among Latinas
Monica D. Ulibarri, Anita Raj, and Hortensia Amaro
5. Demonstrated Effectiveness and Potential of Community-Based Participatory Research for Preventing HIV in Latino Populations
Scott Rhodes
6. Mexico-US Migration, Social Exclusion, and HIV risk: Multi-sectoral Approaches to Understanding and Preventing Infection
Jennifer S. Hirsch and Emily Vasquez
7. Inequality, Discrimination and HIV Risk: A Review of Research on Latino Gay Men
Rafael M. Díaz, Jorge Sánchez, and Kurt Schroeder
8. Homophobia, Racism, Financial Hardship and AIDS: Unpacking the Effects of Social Discrimination on the Sexual Risk for HIV among Latino Gay Men
George Ayala
9. Contextual Influences of Sexual Risk among Latino MSM
Maria Cecilia Zea, Carol A. Reisen, Fernanda T. Bianchi, and Paul J. Poppen
10. Clean Sweeps and Social Control in Latino Bisexual Male Sex Markets in New York City
Edgar Rivera Colón, Miguel Muñoz-Laboy, and Diana Hernández
11. Latina Transgender Women: The Social Context of HIV Risk and Responsive Multi-level Prevention Capacity Building
Frank Galvan and Joanne Keatley
12. HIV Risk and Prevention for Latinos in Jails and Prisons
Megan Comfort, Carmen Albizu-García, Timoteo Rodriguez, and Carlos Molina III
13. Puerto Rican Heterosexual Serodiscordant Couples: Cultural Challenges for Healthy Dyads
Sheilla Rodríguez-Madera and Nelson Varas-Díaz
14. HIV/STI Risk among Latino Migrant Men in New Receiving Communities: A Case Study of Post-disaster New Orleans
Patricia Kissinger and Michele G. Shedlin
15. Reducing HIV Sexual Risk for Latino Adolescents: An Ecodevelopmental Perspective
Antonia M. Villarruel, Vincent Guilamo-Ramos, and Jose Bauermeister
16. Improving Latina Intergenerational Family-Based Communication to Decrease HIV and Other Sexual Risks
Britt Rios-Ellis
17. The Landscape of Latina HIV Prevention Interventions and their Implementation: Cultural Sensitivity in Community Based Organizations
Miriam Y. Vega and Lina Cherfas
18. Interventions to Prevent HIV and Other Sexually Transmitted Diseases among Latino Migrants
Thomas M. Painter, Kurt C. Organista, Scott D. Rhodes, and Fernando M. Sañudo
19. HIV Prevention Interventions with Puerto Rican Injection Drug Users
Lisa de Saxe Zerden, Luz Marilis López, and Lena Lundgre
Index
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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